China Daily (Hong Kong)

LaLaLand captures the soaring spirit of classic musicals and sets it in modern life’s trappings

- By ROBBIE COLLIN

If you’ve only just heard about La La Land, you may be wondering what all the song and dance is about. But if you’ve been tracing its trajectory for a while, you’ ll know that song and dance is the whole idea.

The delectable new film from Damien Chazelle — winner of seven Golden Globes, recipient of 11 Bafta nomination­s, and the expected winner of the 89th Academy Award for Best Picture — is a musical. And not just any old musical, but the twirling, soaring kind that was last in style in the 1960s heyday of Jacques Demy, when Catherine Deneuve and Françoise Dorléac swished down sun-drenched boulevards in sorbet-coloured minidresse­s, trilling glistening jazz-pop numbers that imprint themselves on your heart in one go.

Chazelle captures that spirit — which was fondly nostalgic even in Demy’s day — and releases it into the wilds of present-day Los Angeles like he’s returning a long-absent species to its natural habitat. Old Hollywood is where the movie musical first flourished, after all — and though its golden age may be long gone, the film has faith that a boy, a girl, a bench and a plum-coloured sunrise are still capable of working their magic.

The boy in question is Sebastian (Ryan Gosling), a passionate jazz pianist with a half-formed but wholeheart­ed ambition to open a club of his own and defend his favourite music from extinction. And the girl is Mia (Emma Stone), a gifted aspiring actress who flits between fruitless auditions and a coffee shop till on the Warner Bros studio lot. All that each of them needs is an opportunit­y. What they find is each other.

Whether or not the latter of those things can make up for the absence of the former is the big question on La La Land’s mind, and the answer isn’t as glib as you might expect. Behind the film’s nimble comedy and exuberant musical set-pieces beats a complex, crisply written romance, the power of which creeps up on you slowly then strikes in the film’s second half, in which Sebastian and Mia’s ambitions and relationsh­ip become increasing­ly tricky to reconcile.

Once you’ve waltzed through the stars — as do our lovers at the film’s halfway point, in an unabashedl­y gorgeous gravity-defying fantasia — the only way is down.

But everyone in La La Land is wrestling with ambition. In the opening number — there really is no mistaking the film is a musical from the get-go — attractive young hopefuls spill out of their cars in an impregnabl­e traffic jam, and sing about the city’s daunting show-business heritage, and the grit it takes to even try to measure up to it.

Their enthusiasm level borders, I suspect very deliberate­ly, on manic, and the song’s title — Another Day of Sun — is repeated over and over, like an insistentl­y chipper knockknock-knock on an agent’s door that just won’t open.

This happens to be the very jam Mia and Sebastian find themselves in. They first meet seconds after the song ends, in fact, although the interactio­n involves nothing more than a jabbed car horn and a raised middle finger, and doesn’t prove memorable for either of them.

It takes a further two encounters for things to click, but Stone and Gosling — who’ve made a convincing screen couple twice before, in Crazy, Stupid, Love and Gangster Squad — leave you more than persuaded that some serious clicking has taken place.

Both stars are so attuned to each other’s pace and flow that their repartee just seems to tumble out, perfectly formed. Perhaps hardest of all, they make it look easy. Gosling may be the first actor in film history to somehow pull off looking self-dep-

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling in La La Land.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling in La La Land.

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